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capi workstation setup 🐋

Hello there! This repo is meant to replace the CAPI team sprout-wrap with some new, lighter-weight tooling.

capi

Dependencies

  • Mac OSX Sierra

Goals:

  • Tooling is clear and easy to understand - where things are, what they do, how to modify them.
  • Bash scripts are small, pretty and well-commented.
  • Provide guidance or ability to clean up if you switch teams, or if installation fails
  • Keep setup minimal - only include packages and tools that are useful on a regular or daily basis.
  • It should be easy to add new things and modify this tooling.
  • Users should feel safe running this tooling. Users include: OSS Foundation members, new CAPI teammates, visiting pairs, and remote team members with personal laptops
  • Idempotent
  • Able to be run nightly, without human intervention

Installation:

    mkdir -p ~/workspace && cd ~/workspace
    git clone [email protected]:cloudfoundry/capi-workspace.git && cd capi-workspace
    ./install.sh

Manual steps (to be automated later)

  • Open System Preferences / Users & Groups / / Login Items
    • Add flycut from Applications
    • Add spectacle from Applications
  • Log out/Log in
    • This will cause Flycut and Spectacle to run and ask for permissions
  • Open up Rubymine manually and select License Server and copy in the the rubymine license from the labs license server (http://omaha.pivotallabs.com:8080/licenseServer in the SF office)
    • If you are not on a Pivotal Network, you need to VPN into one in order to access this server.
  • Install the mine cli shortcut (RubyMine -> Tools -> Create Command-line Launcher...)
  • If you are using Goland do the same two previous steps for Goland

Contributing to this repo

  • bash-it We use bash-it to organize and streamline our bash settings. This includes stuff like color schemes, aliases, shell settings, and the shell prompt formatting. Adding "plugins" to custom-bash-it-plugins will cause them to be installed in every new shell.

TODO: add more instructions on adding to different parts of this setup, e.g. aliases, iterm config etc.

Nice-To-Haves / Future Goals:

  • Cross-platform compatibility (for teammates who run Linux at home)
  • Ability to select with parts to install